Saturday, 11.22.2008, 02:50am (GMT-7)
  Home
  FAQ
  RSS
  Links
  Site Map
  Contact
 
US Health department seeks AAPI's help in Afghanistan ; 'Developing countries victims, not cause' ; G-20 meet underscores gravity of economic crisis ; Sri Chinmoy statue at Oslo's Waterfront Centre ; US wants UN framework for prosecution of pirates
::| Keyword:       [Advance Search]
 
NAVIGATION  
  Bollywood
  Community Post
  Health Science
  Horoscope
  Immigration
  India
  Life Style
  Perspective
  Philosophy
  Real Estate
  Sports
  TechBiz
  Travel
  US News
  ::| Poll
Is their bias in Anand Jon trial?
Yes
No
Can't Say
 
  ::| Newsletter
Your Name:
Your Email:
 
 
 
TechBiz
 
US slowdown can have positive spin-offs for India: Kamal Nath
Sunday, 02.10.2008, 10:22pm (GMT-7)

 NEW DELHI: Indian economy will attract more global investments benefiting from the US slowdown but the country should not get "psyched" by the bubble burst there, Commerce and Industry Minister Kamal Nath said.However, on the cautious side a study has been initiated in his Ministry to assess the impact of US slowdown on the Indian economy."It will take a fortnight to do an assessment of what it means to India," he told PTI.Earlier, the US was the most attractive investment destination for funds from the Middle East and Russia.

"All this is changing... India is becoming an important parking lot for investments," Nath said, adding gloomier the US outlook, better it was for India from an investment point of view."We must ensure we do not get psyched into the sentimentality of the US downturn. It should not psyche India into pessimism or into an economic impact here," Nath said. He said the fundamentals of the Indian economy remained strong "but a fine calibration is required to ensure that the momentum continues despite the gloomy economic outlook globally".

Nath said the country's GDP would grow by more than nine per cent in 2007-08 when asked whether he shared the optimism of Finance Minister P Chidambaram. "I agree with the Finance Minister. It (GDP growth) could be higher than nine per cent," he said.But Nath agreed that the country needs to manage the dangers of overflow of overseas funds, which through impact on rupee, have been affecting the country's exports.

Nath said though the global economy had an impact on exports, the government has not revised the target of 160 billion dollars for the current fiscal."It is looking, may be, tough to achieve the target. But I am not revising the target. For the time being, I am sticking to it," he said.Nath said even if targets were not met, exports would still grow by 20 per cent over last year."If we had not reached it (target), no heavens would fall.

The fact is we are still ahead, let's face the fact," he said.With less than 20 per cent share of the Gross Domestic Product, the one trillion dollar Indian economy is pre-dominantly driven by the domestic consumption, which in turn is getting a boost from over eight per cent rise in per capita income.

While putting up a brave face and stating that the US economic troubles would not creep into the Indian economic outlook, he agreed that the country was engaged with the world's largest economy which faces more threats in the weeks to come. "India is not coupled with the US economy. It is not dependent but engaged with the US economy," he said adding that trade destination has also been changing from the west to the east.Nath said the US, which had become the high priest of the best business practices, could face more troubles in the near future.

"The US has been telling the world about best banking practices; they have the worst banking crisis. They have been telling the world even about corporate social responsibility; they have more CEOs in trouble and being prosecuted than any other country," he said.Nath described the Indian banking system to be far more solid in terms of different prudential parameters.
-PTI

    Print        Tell friend        Top


Other Articles:
'Most Indian households don't invest in savings' (02.10.2008)
High-tech Internet lab in Govt school to accelerate sustainable change (02.10.2008)
Govt relaxes FDI norms; opens commodity exchanges (02.03.2008)
Raj Mehta first Indian American to win David Award (02.03.2008)
Tata buys US General Chemical for 1 billion dollars (02.03.2008)
If interest rate is dampener to growth, Govt will act: FM (01.27.2008)
Threat of a new cold war 'nonsense': Rice (01.27.2008)
Mumbai ready for makeover: Deshmukh (01.27.2008)
India badly hit by global meltdown (01.23.2008)
India braces for impact of possible slowdown in US economy (01.21.2008)



 
  ::| Events
November 2008  
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
            1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30            
 
::| Hot News
Obama calls Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
Ambani to provide India 40% oil needs
India badly hit by global meltdown
TATAS SET TO BAG JAGUAR & A UK BANK

Contact us:
(510) 429 - 2110
[Top Page]